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Why should I use them?
After reading a user story, the team knows why they are building a feature and the value the feature creates for the end user. Knowing the value of the feature helps create the best user experience possible, ensuring that the user can accomplish their goal with the application.
At EY Design Studio, we find user stories beneficial because:
- They focus on the user and their needs. Stories keep the team focused on helping resolve problems for real users and ensuring they’re able to accomplish their goals. This purpose can often get lost if there’s a checklist of other to-dos.
- They allow for equal amounts of understanding and collaboration. When the client’s requirements are written in a way that can be understood by the developers, and the user’s end goals are described in laypersons’ terms for project managers, stakeholders and clients, the team can work together more cohesively to deliver the best solution for the user.
- They drive creative solutions. User stories don’t explain how the user will achieve something, just what they can accomplish from doing it, which enables developers to implement solutions in whichever way best helps the application and the end user.
When do I use them?
User stories are written throughout the agile project. However, the business analyst assigned to the project should produce user stories in the discovery phase. After the discovery phase, everyone on the team will then participate to create a product backlog of user stories. This backlog will fully describe the functionality to be added over the course of the project. In an agile project, new stories can be written and added to the product backlog at any time, by anyone.